Indian child couple succeed in having marriage annulled

AFP, JAIPUR, INDIA

An Indian couple who “married” when aged just one and three have had their wedding annulled in a groundbreaking case activists hope will challenge the culture of child marriages.

Laxmi Sargara, 18, unknowingly wed her husband, Rakesh, 20, in the desert state of Rajasthan 17 years ago after their families decided that when they grew up they would live together and have children.

In the first procedure of its type, the pair had their union legally revoked in the city of Jodhpur on Tuesday as part of a campaign against enforced child marriages.

“I was unhappy about the marriage. I told my parents, who did not agree with me, then I sought help,” Sargara said. “Now I am mentally relaxed and my family members are also with me.”

When she discovered that she was married, Sargara went for advice to social worker Kriti Bharti, who runs the Sarathi Trust in Jodhpur, a welfare organization that lobbies for children’s rights.

Bharti negotiated with Rakesh, the groom, who only uses one name, and both families to persuade them that the marriage was unfair.

“Laxmi was married to Rakesh when she was as young as one year old. Now she is 18 and a few days back she was informed by her parents that she was married and she would have to go to her husband’s house,” Bharti said on Wednesday.

“Hearing this, she got depressed. She did not like the boy and was not ready to go ahead with her parents’ decision so she decided to refuse this marriage,” Bharti said.

“It is the first example we know of a couple wed in childhood wanting the marriage to be annulled, and we hope that others take inspiration from it,” Bharti added.

Rakesh, who works driving an earth-mover, at first wanted to press ahead with the relationship, but was convinced by his wife’s fierce opposition to agree that the marriage should be revoked, Bharti said.

Child marriage is illegal in India, but remains common in poor, rural communities in which it is seen as improving the financial security of both families.

The girl often remains in her parents’ home until she reaches puberty and is then taken amid great celebrations to her husband’s family.

The annulment took place on the same day as the Akshaya Tritiya festival, a traditional date of mass child weddings.

On Sunday, villagers in Rajasthan attacked and injured at least 12 government officials who tried to stop a wedding of about 40 child couples.